Thursday, March 27, 2008

Free Chinese Lesson - New diabetes genetic risk factors found

WORLD / Health

New diabetes genetic risk factors found

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-27 16:33

WASHINGTON - Scientists have found clusters of new gene variants that
raise the risk of Type 2 diabetes - and how the researchers did it is as
important as what they found.

Scientists have found clusters of new gene variants that raise the risk
of Type 2 diabetes. In one of the largest studies yet of human genetic
variability, the scientists tested the DNA of more than 32,000 people in
five countries to pin down spots that harbor genetic risk factors for
this complicated killer. [AP]

In one of the largest studies yet of human genetic variability, the
scientists tested the DNA of more than 32,000 people in five countries to
pin down spots that harbor genetic risk factors for this complicated
killer.

This type of research - called a "genome-wide association" study -
promises to usher in a new era of genetics. Most breakthroughs so far
have come from finding a mutation in a single gene that causes illness.
But some of the world's most common killers, such as heart disease and
diabetes, are caused by complex interactions among numerous genes and
modern lifestyles - and teasing out the genetic culprits until now has
been almost impossible.

"We have been for all of the last decade or more looking under the
lamppost to try to find those genes ... and lots of times the lamplight
was not actually where we wanted it," said Dr. Francis Collins, genetics
chief at the National Institutes of Health, a co-author of the research
unveiled Thursday.

This new approach "allows us to light up the whole street, and look what
we find."

What? Four previously unknown gene variants that can increase people's
risk of Type 2 diabetes, and confirmation that six other genes play a
role, too.

The work, by three international research teams that shared their
findings, was published online Thursday by the journal Science.

Also Thursday in the journal Nature Genetics, another team led by Iceland
researchers reported separately finding one of those same new genes - and
that, interestingly, it seems to increase the diabetes risk most in
people who aren't obese.

Next, the researchers will have to figure out just what those genes do,
in hopes they'll point toward new ways to treat or prevent a disease that
affects more than 170 million people worldwide, and rising.

With Type 2 diabetes, the body gradually loses its ability to use
insulin, a hormone key for turning blood sugar into insulin. It is a
major cause of heart disease, as high blood sugar damages blood vessels,
and leads to kidney failure, blindness and amputations.

Obesity and lack of exercise are chief risk factors. But heredity is
involved, too: People with an affected parent or sibling are at 3.5 times
greater risk of developing diabetes than people from diabetes-free
families.

The new work scanned DNA to find patterns of small gene variations known
as SNPs (pronounced "snips") more common in diabetics. SNPs can serve as
signposts for tracing disease-promoting genes. To be certain the
implicated SNPs were involved, the researchers then checked for them in
still more volunteers, ultimately testing DNA from 32,500 people in
Britain, Finland, Poland, Sweden and the US.

The highest-risk variants can increase by 20 percent someone's odds of
developing Type 2 diabetes, the teams reported.

Among the genes implicated:

One that helps pump zinc into insulin-producing pancreatic cells, raising
questions about the metal's role in insulin secretion.

A pair previously linked only to certain cancers, another brand new area
for diabetes researchers to probe.

A region of chromosome 11 where genes of any sort had never been
described.

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Chinese Online Class - Sympathy and shame in South Korea

WORLD / Top News

Sympathy and shame in South Korea

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-21 09:45

SEOUL, South Korea - The reaction to the Virginia Tech massacre in the
nation where the shooter was born has been an outpouring of sympathy
mixed with feelings of shame. There are also concerns that going too far
in apologizing would make it appear South Korea is unjustifiably taking
some blame for the killings.

South Korean Buddhists pray for the victims of the Virginia Tech shooting
massacre in Blacksburg, Va. during a special Buddhist mass at the Chogye
Temple in Seoul, South Korea, Friday, April 20, 2007. [AP]

Expressions of regret have ranged from candlelight vigils and religious
services to online tributes. South Korea's ambassador to the U.S.
proposed the idea of Koreans living in America taking turns in a 32-day
fast to honor each of the victims.

President Roh Moo-hyan has expressed condolences four times -- the first
before it even emerged the culprit was a South Korean immigrant, followed
by words of sympathy to the American people and to President Bush.

"This is a sensitive time," the leading Chosun Ilbo daily cautioned in an
editorial. "We must ensure that our true intentions, to share the sorrow,
can travel across the ocean and reach the hearts of grieving Americans."

Seung-Hui Cho left South Korea as a boy and lived in the United States
for more than 14 years, where he apparently grew into a deeply troubled
young man whose murderous spree was facilitated by easy access to guns.

Much of the reaction to Cho's nationality in his native land is colored
by South Korea's keen awareness of its national image. South Korea is
obsessed with how it is perceived by the outside world, and its
group-oriented culture means the achievements of the few are marshaled
into rallying cries for the many.

"Koreans think very much in terms of national identity rather than
individual identity," said Michael Breen, author of the book "The
Koreans: Who They Are, What They Want, Where Their Future Lies."

South Koreans are quick to take group credit even from afar. The most
notable recent example is Pittsburgh Steelers' wide receiver Hines Ward,
the offspring of an African-American father and Korean mother, who was
feted as a national hero after he was named Most Valuable Player in the
2006 Super Bowl -- even though he and American football were virtually
unknown here before.

But that sense of collective pride has also meant Koreans fear facing
group reprisal after Cho's shooting spree.

There are worries about everything from personal assaults to possible
fallout for a proposed free trade agreement between Seoul and Washington
or long-held hopes of relaxed U.S. visa requirements for South Koreans.

The deputy head of the U.S. Embassy in South Korea reassured Koreans in a
speech Friday they should not feel any collective guilt and that the
shooting would have no bearing on U.S.-South Korean ties -- forged after
American forces came to South Korea's defense in the 1950-53 Korean War.

"This tragic incident will have no influence on our bilateral
relationship. It was an act of one individual," said Deputy Chief of
Mission William Stanton.

Part of the reason South Koreans may express fears of reprisals is
because of what could have transpired had the situation been reversed and
an American student went on a rampage at a South Korean campus, noted
Breen.

For example, when two girls were killed in a traffic accident involving a
U.S. military vehicle in 2002, South Korea was gripped with anti-American
fervor whipped up by mass protests. The mood was fanned by politicians
seeking a boost in that year's presidential vote that brought Roh to
power with a promise not to "kowtow" to the U.S.

Since Monday's shootings, however, there have been no signs of any
reprisals against Koreans in the United States.

"It will be very instructive to Koreans to watch the reaction of
Americans," Breen, a Briton, said of the response to the shooting
rampage. "They know it's more gracious than their own reaction would be."

The shooting story has been the top news this week in all South Korean
media -- as it would be even in the absence of a Korean connection, given
the scale of the massacre that has shaken the country's key ally.

Media here have also reported on the rest of the world's coverage of the
event, and appeared to display a sense of relief that their reporting
focused on U.S. gun culture along with Cho's psychological problems as
the main factors behind the rampage.

The shootings have also led South Korea to embark on some soul-searching
about its children and the ever-increasing pressures they face amid
cutthroat competition at school. Writing in the Hankyoreh newspaper,
columnist Sin Ki-sup said there were other young people like Cho who are
"lost in despair and rage" and called on parents to help.

"The beginning of a solution will be the recognition that the dreams of
young people are in a state of collapse," Sin wrote. "Dreams that have
collapsed might not be revivable, but if we share their pain, we might
help them begin to dream new dreams."

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Chinese Online Class - Virginia Tech massacre act of "deranged individual"

WORLD / Reactions

Virginia Tech massacre act of "deranged individual"

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-04-18 09:57

LOS ANGELES -- U.S. community leaders in Los Angeles on Tuesday urged
Angelenos to view the Virginia Tech massacre as an isolated crime
committed by "one deranged individual."

Earl Ofari Hutchinson, who heads the Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable,
and other community leaders delivered a letter of support to the Korean
Consulate in an effort to reach out to Korean-American leaders in Los
Angeles, which has the largest Korean population outside Seoul.

Hutchinson said it was important "to urge others to see this as the act
of one deranged individual and to not use it for scapegoating."

Because the massacre was so "monstrous," he said, it was bound to have
severe repercussions, and he didn't want to see a knee-jerk reaction
against Korean Americans."

He praised Korean President Roh Moo-hyun's "forthright and immediate
response" to the massacre, saying one thing that really motivated was the
forthright and immediate response of President Roh when issuing his
condolences and support.

"I felt it was important to back that up," Hutchinson said.

He said he wanted to reach out to Korean Americans in Los Angeles because
of historical tensions between blacks and Koreans, such as the rancor
over the 1991 shooting death of 15-year-old Latasha Harlins by Soon Ja
Du, a Korean-American grocer who suspected the girl of shoplifting.

The gunman in yesterday's massacre at Virginia Tech was identified as Cho
Seung-Hui, 23, who came to the United States from South Korea as a boy.

Officials from the Los Angeles-based National Korean American Service &
Education Consortium -- a Korean-American civil rights group -- issued a
statement decrying the Virginia Tech shooting.

"Our hearts go out to the victims, their family members and friends," the
group said. "This unspeakable tragedy hurts all of us. As a community,
Korean Americans will come together to provide the support and resources
needed for the students, their families and the faculty at Virginia Tech
to overcome the grief and pain that overwhelms them all at this moment."

"The Korean-American community will join the efforts of others in
tackling the root causes of these senseless school shootings that
continue to endanger our children and young adults," the statement read.

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Chinese language - N. Korea wants to delay reactor shutdown

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

N. Korea wants to delay reactor shutdown

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-11 15:30

In this Korea Central News Agency photo released by Korea News Service in
Tokyo, Kim Yong Dae, vice president of North Korea's Supreme People's
Assembly, center, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, third from left, and
Anthony Principi, US President George W. Bush's former veteran affairs
secretary, third from right, pose with US and North Korean officials
during their meeting in Pyongyang, North Korea, Tuesday, April 10, 2007.
[AP]

PYONGYANG, North Korea - North Korea's key condition for halting nuclear
weapons development has been met now that frozen funds have been
released, but it wants to delay a weekend deadline for shutting down its
atomic reactor by a month, a US official said Wednesday.

Related readings:
US: North Korea funds deadlock broken
Macau prepared to unblock N.Korea funds
N.Korea: Inspectors in if funds freed
Richardson sees N.Korea set for nuke deal
S.Korea optimistic for nuclear deal
US official meets N.Korean diplomats over funds
US, China officials discuss frozen N. Korea funds
US Treasury sends official to sort out N.Korea funds
N. Korea talks expected to regroup

North Korea will invite back UN weapons inspectors as soon as it can
access the money from bank accounts in the Chinese territory of Macau and
will return to international talks on shutting its nuclear program "at an
early date," the official said.

However, North Korea wants to delay a Saturday deadline for switching off
its sole operating nuclear reactor by 30 days, the official said, adding
that any such change would require agreement from all countries involved
in arms talks with the North.

The six-party negotiations involve the United States, the two Koreas,
China, Japan and Russia.

The comments were made to a visiting US delegation, said the official
with knowledge of the discussions, who spoke on condition of anonymity
because of the sensitivity of the talks.

US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, the main US envoy to
the North Korea nuclear talks, said he hoped that U.N. nuclear inspectors
would be able to travel to the North "in a matter of days."

"We see no reason why (North Korea) should hold up anything right now,"
Hill said in Seoul after meeting South Korean diplomats. "I don't want to
get into extending the deadline."

In a deal struck in February, North Korea pledged to shut down its
nuclear reactor in exchange for energy aid and political concessions,
while Washington agreed to resolve the financial issue in 30 days.
However, technical difficulties delayed the release of the money from
Macau's privately run Banco Delta Asia bank.

The US blacklisted the Macau bank in 2005 for its alleged complicity in
counterfeiting and money laundering by North Korea; BDA has denied any
wrongdoing. The move prompted the North to boycott the nuclear talks for
more than a year, during which it conducted its first-ever nuclear
weapons test in October.

"I think we have come to a very important juncture, which is we consider
this (Banco Delta Asia) matter to be really resolved," Hill said. "Now is
really an important time to get on with the ever-urgent task of
denuclearization."

Macau's Monetary Authority said Wednesday that the holders of $25 million
in North Korean accounts can now access the funds.

"The account holders, as long as they are authorized, can proceed to the
bank to withdraw or transfer the money," authority spokeswoman Wendy Au
said.

A US delegation that includes New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, Victor Cha,

President Bush's top adviser on North Korea, and Anthony Principi, Bush's
former veteran affairs secretary, ended a four-day trip to Pyongyang on
Wednesday to recover remains of American servicemen killed in the 1950-53
Korean War.

The group made a rare crossing of the border dividing the Koreas around
midday Wednesday with six sets of remains.

North Korea also agreed to meet US envoy Hill soon to discuss
implementing the Feb. 13 agreement, the US official said, without giving
a time.

Hill is expected in Beijing on Thursday, and said he was open to a
meeting there with North Korea's main nuclear negotiator, Kim Kye Gwan.

If North Korea follows through with its promises, they would be the first
moves the county has made to scale back its nuclear development since it
expelled international inspectors and restarted its sole operating
nuclear reactor in 2003.

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Chinese School - Iran appears ready for long standoff

WORLD / Middle East

Iran appears ready for long standoff

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-02 15:35

TEHRAN, Iran - The standoff over 15 captured British sailors shows no
signs of abating, and analysts say that Iran's tough stance is a
demonstration of the power of hardliners unafraid to confront the West.

An Iranian man chants slogan as police officers prevent protestors from
entering the British Embassy in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, April 1, 2007,
during a protest calling for the expulsion of the British ambassador
because of the standoff over Iran's capture of 15 British sailors and
marines. [AP]

Events on Sunday only further polarized the situation: Two of the sailors
appeared on state TV, acknowledging they trespassed into Iranian waters,
and about 200 angry Iranian youths threw rocks and firecrackers at the
British Embassy and unsuccessfully tried to rush its grounds.

Special coverage:
British Sailors Detained 
Related readings:
UK denounces video of seized sailors
Protest in Iran targets British Embassy
Britain studying Iran standoff options
Bush to Iran: 'Give back the hostages'

Iran airs second British's apology UN urges resolution of Iran seizure
UK turns up heat on Iran over sailors
Iran TV shows footage of UK sailors
Brit presses Iran; woman may be freed
Blair warns Iran standoff could escalate
Iran: Sailors being treated humanely

Iranian students from several universities shouted "Death to Britain!"
and "Death to America!" and demanded the government shut down the "den of
spies" - echoes of slogans from a crisis of a generation ago, when
American captives were held hostage by Tehran for 444 days.

Demonstrations in Iran must receive approval from the Interior Ministry.

The 15 Britons were detained by Iranian naval units on March 23 while
patrolling for smugglers as part of a UN-mandated force monitoring the
Persian Gulf. They were seized by Iranian naval units near the mouth of
the Shatt al-Arab, a waterway that has long been a disputed dividing line
between Iraq and Iran. Iran insists the sailors illegally entered its
waters, but Britain says the team was in Iraqi waters at the time of
their capture.

Iran has brushed aside diplomatic overtures from the European Union,
Japan and Turkey in recent days. And hardline President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad has taken a higher-profile role, declaring in his most
extensive comments on the crisis that Britain and its allies were
"arrogant and selfish" for not apologizing over what he called the
Britons' incursion into Iranian waters.

Before the new video was released, Britain appeared to be holding out
hope for a diplomatic resolution, saying it was in direct contact with
Iran and examining options for new dialogue.

Britain's Foreign Office denounced the video, saying it was "completely
unacceptable for these pictures to be shown on TV."

Many observers were already pessimistic.

"This is going to be a prolonged problem," said Dr. Abdulkhaleq Abdulla,
a political scientist at the United Arab Emirates University in Dubai.
"There are parties in Iran who would like to turn this into another test
of strong will, and to show that Iran is capable of making the West meet
its demands."

It had appeared earlier in the week that the Iranians were looking for a
way to end the standoff quickly. Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said
Wednesday that the only woman captive, Faye Turney, would be released
soon.

1 2 

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Chinese Mandarin - Ding, defending champ Williams ousted at China Open

Sports / China

Ding, defending champ Williams ousted at China Open

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-03-29 09:19

Defending champion Mark Williams and China Ding were all knocked out off
the 2007 China Open snooker tournament here on Wednesday.

Jamie Cope fired in breaks of 134, 68, 72, 104 and 86 as he cruised to a
5-1 win to end the reign of Mark Williams in this tournament.

China's Ding Junhui reacts during the 2007 World Snooker China Open in
the first round game against Barry Hawkins March 29 in Beijing. [Xinhua]
Williams, who beat John Higgins 9-8 in last year's final, has slipped to
the tenth in the latest world rankings.

"That's one of the best performances I've ever seen against me. He hardly
missed a ball and I didn't get much of a look-in." said the former world
champion.

The only disappointment for the 21-year-old Cope was his failure to
convert either of two chances to deliver 147 points.

"That's the best game I've played for a long time, If I keep playing like
that I can beat anyone, so maybe I could be the champion," said Cope.

He missed a tricky red on 72 in frame four then a much easier penultimate
red on 104 in the next.

"I make a lot of 147s in practice so I always go for them when I have a
chance, it's a shame I couldn't make one this time," added Cope.

Cope faces Stuart Bingham in the last 16 after he beat veteran Steve
Davis 5-4 with a tight final-frame decider.

Barry Hawkins signaled his intent from the start with a wonderful 116
clearance, before breaks of 134, 77, 59 and 73 to help him seal a 5-3 win
over "China Ding" in a more then three hours-match.

"Clearly, Ding was under pressure, and he still did his best," said
Hawkins.

Ding Junhui refused to open his mouth after the match despite dozens of
journalists flooded the conference room.

In the previous matches, Li Hang of China was beaten by former world
champion Ken Doherty 5-1, and his team mate Mei Xiwen was also eliminated
out of the tournament.

Former world champion Shaun Murphy cruised to a 5-1 win over Chinese
wildcard Mei Xiwen with a breaks of 67, 58, 43, 43 and 54.

"I didn't score that heavily, but it was my first professional victory in
China, so it meant a lot to me," said Murphy.

"Clearly, I was not in the same level with British professional players,
such as Murphy. I hope next time I could do better," said Mei Xiwen.

Murphy faces Stephen Maguire in the next round after the Scotsman
defeated Mark King 5-3.

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Chinese School - Rockets can't stop Paul, Hornets

Sports / flash

Rockets can't stop Paul, Hornets

(Sina)
Updated: 2007-03-26 11:05

Chris Paul scored 28 points and David West added 23 to lead the New
Orleans Hornets to a 106-94 win Sunday night against the Houston Rockets.
Tracy McGrady scored 31 points to lead Houston, which had a five-game
winning streak snapped. Yao Ming added 16 points, Luther Head scored 15
off the bench and Rafer Alston had 12. [Sina]

1 2 3 4 5 

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Learn Chinese - Iraqis views four years after U.S. invasion

WORLD / Post-war Reconstruction

Iraqis views four years after U.S. invasion

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-03-20 17:04

Following are quotes from Iraqis as they look back at four years since
the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003.

BAGHDAD

* "We have faced terrorism on a scale we didn't know existed in the past
four years. Everybody has lost someone close but we can always remain
optimistic that everything will improve once everyone agrees using
violence for political gain is wrong." - Ahmed Riyadh, 28, barber.

* "If you take away the constant violence by these terrorist groups and
the Baathists, you will find that life has improved a lot especially in
terms of employment and living standards. Everyone will see this once the
Iraqis regain their full sovereignty." - Karrar Haitham, 41, teacher.

* "After four years I can say that the country is lost. We never expected
this would happen. We were hoping to live like a European country, not to
be living like this." - Salih Abu Mehdi, 43, security guard and father of
six children.

MOSUL

* "The Americans came to rob Iraq and to end the Islamic religion... They
rebuild what they destroy and we have no security." - Mohammed Ameen,
bookshop owner.

* "Are they serious in bringing us democracy when they have lost their
own democracies. I watched anti-war protestors in Washington being
arrested by police. The Americans have not benefited Iraq and whoever
says the opposite is like an ostrich with its head underground." - Marwan
Abdul-Karim, 27, works in a mobile phone store.

KIRKUK

* "During Saddam's era security was better but Iraqis were oppressed by
the intelligence forces... What did we Kurds get from dictatorships apart
from Anfal, displacement and having our women sold to other countries?" -
Aras Mohammed, 57-year-old Kurd and father of five.

* "What did we get from Bush's democracy other than racism and sectarian
killings? ... Who used to say Sunni or Shi'ite before 2003? When security
was lost everything else went, thousands emigrated and the rest are
either suffering from an illness or waiting for fate." - Abdullah Fadhil,
34 -year-old Arab.

NAJAF

* "These four years were better than Saddam Hussein's era, but we know
that a change of government breeds insecurity, and Takfiris (hardline
Islamist insurgents) and Saddam followers who ruled Iraq for 35 years are
creating this. But at least we are free to celebrate our religious
occasions now." - Hussein Ali Musawi, 33, car mechanic.

* "Saddam's regime was better than this one, the clerics have no use and
they are not politicians. If they can't provide basic services and
security then they should just go sit in their homes. My husband had his
arm cut off by a bomb and we have no income because he cannot work." -
Suad Abid Hur, 55, housewife.

ARBIL

* "The liberation of Iraq and the end of Saddam's rule was a dream for
us, but the way the American forces behaved in Iraq after Saddam's
removal spoiled our joy and ended our dreams." - Ahmed Ali, 33.

* "The political change has been positive on Kurdistan and people can
have optimism for the future now." - Ilham Butrus, 45, doctor.

RAMADI

* "All we have seen during the past four years is destruction, murder,
kidnappings and fear. We haven't been able to live one single day in
comfort since the invasion." - Majid Ahmed Khalifa, 40.

* "We have not seen security these past years. We have seen the killing
of innocent civilians and sectarian violence that has emerged after
Baghdad fell to the occupation." - Abdul-Basit Kareem, 45.

DOHUK

* "I waited for America to bring us democracy, freedom and human rights
and help us achieve some peace of mind but what happened was the
opposite. The Americans brought chaos, torture and destruction with
them." - Salah Dowsky, 31.

SAMAWA

* "The degree of fear before the invasion did not change after it, only
the reasons did. The officials who caused fear before did it through
power and fire. The new ones do it through democracy." - Dr. Naji Kashi,
50, college professor.

* "Our city is better than the rest of Iraq in terms of security and our
forces try to control some breaches of security that have occurred
between now and then. But the occupiers have been here for four years and
we don't have security because of the vacuum that was created at the
beginning." - Ikram Karim, 46, state employee.

DIWANIYA

* "There were a lot of changes during the last four years. We have had a
growing economy and my father was able to purchase furniture after he
sold it years ago. But the negative changes are crucial. The killings and
sectarianism in general reduce living standards." - Muthanna Yasir, 22,
student.

* "The invasion occurred after sanctions and immense human suffering but
it brought us good cars for cheap prices and freedom but I quickly forgot
about those positive things and all I wanted was to live in security and
laws that guarantee justice, freedom and equality." - Ali Jasim, 34, taxi
driver.

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� Poll: Fear, anger, stress grip Iraqis

Today's Top News 

� President vows to improve strategic ties with France

� Saddam's former deputy hanged in Iraq

� 2 Chinese workers abducted in Nigeria

� Russia colliery blast kills 102 miners

� Thousands protesters against Iraq war

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Free Chinese Lesson - N. Korea nuclear disarmament complex: IAEA

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

N. Korea nuclear disarmament complex: IAEA

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-03-12 22:50

BEIJING - The head of the UN nuclear watchdog said on Monday that moving
to inspect and close facilities behind North Korea's nuclear weapons
program would be complex as the two sides seek to rebuild severed ties.

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohamed
ElBaradei talks to the media during his arrival at a hotel in Beijing
March 12, 2007. [Reuters]

International Atomic Energy Agency director Mohamed ElBaradei was in
Beijing en route to North Korea, where he is to negotiate the return of
agency inspectors as part of a February 13 accord.

That pact aims to wind down North Korea's nuclear weapons ambitions in
exchange for aid and security assurances.

"It is going to be a very incremental process," he told reporters on
arrival in Beijing. "There's a lot of confidence that needs to be built."

IAEA inspectors have not visited the isolated North since 2002, when
Pyongyang expelled them as a previous disarmament deal ruptured. Days
later, North Korea announced its "automatic and immediate" withdrawal
from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

"We need a lot of bridges to build, confidence to re-establish,"
ElBaradei said.

A shutdown of North Korea's Yongbyon nuclear plant by mid-April is the
centerpiece of last month's accord reached in six-party talks grouping
the two Koreas, Japan, Russia, the United States and host China.

"I hope we can agree with the DPRK (North Korea) to get our inspectors
back in time to implement the agreement of the six-party talks," he said.

But he was not certain the IAEA and Pyongyang could agree on how to
proceed in time to meet the 60-day deadline for the shutdown.

MOVE FORWARD

"I'd like this trip at least to establish the framework and then
gradually move forward," he said of North Korea's denuclearization. "It
is in their interests obviously to keep to that deadline, but we'll see."

South Korea's chief envoy to the nuclear talks, Chun Yung-woo, on Monday
gave North Korea good marks for living up to its initial obligations
under the February 13 deal.

"I believe we should be able to implement the initial steps of
denuclearization without any major obstacles if (the countries) continue
to do their utmost, as they have been until now," Chun told reporters,
Yonhap news agency reported.

Japan's top government spokesman said positive results from ElBaradei's
trip were vital to convince the world that North Korea was sincere about
scrapping its nuclear arms.

"It is indispensable (for North Korea) to secure confidence through the
IAEA's activities, and we of course hope that their activities will
produce a breakthrough," the spokesman, Yasuhisa Shiozaki, told reporters

ElBaradei also wanted to discuss North Korea's re-entry into the IAEA,
which oversees global nuclear safeguards, including the Non-Proliferation
Treaty.

"I hope we will be able to agree on modalities to normalize the
relationship with the IAEA and hopefully for the DPRK to come back as a
full member of the agency." The Democratic People's Republic of Korea, or
DPRK, is the North's formal name.

North Korea announced in 2005 it had nuclear arms and in 2006 it
test-detonated its first nuclear device, drawing U.N. financial and arms
sanctions.

ElBaradei met China's chief envoy to the six-party talks, Vice Foreign
Minister Wu Dawei, on Monday, and will leave for Pyongyang on Tuesday,
likely returning to Beijing on Wednesday.

It was unclear who ElBaradei would meet in North Korea, but Melissa
Fleming, an IAEA spokeswoman traveling with him said they anticipated
meeting the senior North Korea envoy to the talks, Kim Kye-gwan. She said
no trip to Yongbyon was planned.

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Learn Chinese online - Iraqi Cabinet approves draft oil law

WORLD / Middle East

Iraqi Cabinet approves draft oil law

(AP)
Updated: 2007-02-27 06:13

BAGHDAD- The Iraqi Cabinet approved draft legislation Monday to manage
the country's vast oil industry and divide its wealth among the
population, a key U.S. benchmark for progress in this country. The
legislation now goes to parliament for approval.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki announced the decision after the Kurds
accepted the draft oil bill over the weekend �� nearly two months after
the government's own deadline for enacting a new oil law.

Al-Maliki said the measures would be "another foundation stone" in
building a new Iraq, which relies on oil revenues for about 90 percent of
its national budget.

It was unclear when 275-member parliament will vote on the measure. The
legislature reconvenes early next month.

All major parties have agreed to work for approval of the measure by May,
but there are no guarantees in Iraq's fractious, sectarian political
system.

"The draft law represents a major breakthrough for Iraq's economic and
political transition," said Deputy Prime Minister Brahma Sale, a Kurd. "I
very much hope the main political groups will rise to the occasion" and
approve the bill in parliament.

Iraq has some of the world's largest petroleum reserves, and supporters
hope the legislation will encourage major oil companies to invest
billions - if the security situation improves.

Under the measure, revenues will be distributed to all 18 provinces based
on population size - a concession to the Sunnis whose central and western
homeland has relatively few proven reserves. Most of Iraq's oil is in the
Kurdish north and Shiite south, and many Sunnis fear they would be cut
out of a fair share.

However, the bill had been bogged down for months in infighting between
al-Maliki's Shiite-led government and the self-ruled Kurdish
administration of northern Iraq over who had the final say in negotiating
contracts and managing the revenues.

In Washington, White House spokesman Tony Snow called a new oil law the
"key linchpin" in Iraq's recovery because it gives "everybody a shared
economic interest in working together."

The haggling went to the heart of the Iraqi crisis - the failure of
religious and ethnic parties to compromise in the interest of saving the
nation. Without such compromises, U.S. commanders doubt that military
crackdowns and the current U.S. and Iraqi security operation can produce
long-term stability.

The Bush administration, facing growing pressure to end the Iraq
conflict, has been urging the Iraqis to finish the new oil law - one of
the benchmarks that al-Maliki's government had pledged to meet by the end
of last year.

"That being done, then the Iraqis can turn to other things, such as
constitutional reform, election reform" and allowing many Sunnis to
return to public life, Snow said.

The Iraqis also missed a year-end deadline to establish provincial
elections, reverse regulations that exclude many Sunnis from government
posts, and grant limited political amnesty to some insurgents.

Under the oil legislation, regional administrations will be empowered to
negotiate contracts with international oil companies. The contracts will
be reviewed by a central government committee in Baghdad headed by the
prime minister.

A new law is needed, most outside experts believe, to encourage
international companies to pour billions into Iraq to repair pipelines,
upgrade wells, develop new fields and begin to exploit the country's vast
petroleum reserves, estimated at about 115 billion barrels.

According to Iraqis familiar with the deliberations, the draft law would
offer international oil companies several methods to invest, including
production-sharing agreements. Those would give U.S. and other
international companies a substantial share of the oil revenues to
recover their initial investments and then allow them big tax breaks.

That angers some Iraqis, who believe foreigners will get too much control
of the nation's wealth.

Some critics of the law believe the draft gives the regions too much
control. The Kurds currently have the only self-governing region in Iraq,
although the 2005 constitution allows other areas to form them too, such
as the Shiites in the oil-rich south.

If implemented, "The balance of power in the management of Iraq's oil and
gas resources would have shifted alarmingly from the center to the
regions," former oil official Tariq Shafiq, who helped draft an early
version, told an oil seminar in Amman, Jordan, this month.

The tortuous negotiations are reminiscent of the intense American
arm-twisting, public pressure and backroom dealmaking that have pushed
nearly every step in Iraq's political transformation since the U.S.-led
invasion nearly four years ago.

The process sometimes has produced agreements that enabled Washington to
declare success but ultimately created a new set of problems - such as a
divisive 2005 election that invigorated the Sunni insurgency, and a new
constitution that the U.S. now acknowledges must be amended substantially
to bring peace.

Some critics fear the oil law will become the latest example.

"The draft law is very dangerous," former oil official Faleh al-Khayat
told the Amman seminar. "It should not be implemented at this time."

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Today's Top News 

� Country sets renewable energy target

� Yangtze drought affects 1.5m people

� CAS takes aim at misconduct

� Iraqi Cabinet approves draft oil law

� 'The Departed' wins Oscar best picture

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Learn mandarin - Iran to strike US interests if attacked

WORLD / Middle East

Iran to strike US interests if attacked

(AP)
Updated: 2007-02-08 20:09

TEHRAN, Iran - If the United States were to attack Iran, the country
would respond by striking US interests all over the world, Iranian
supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Thursday.

Ali Akbar Velayati, an envoy of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei speaks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov during talks
in Moscow on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2007. [AP]

Speaking to a gathering of Iranian air force commanders, Khamenei said:
"The enemy knows well that any invasion would be followed by a
comprehensive reaction to the invaders and their interests all over the
world."

Iranian leaders often speak of a crushing response to any attack. While
the remarks are seen as an attempt to drum up national support, Iran's
position on Iraq and its nuclear program have provoked more than usual
international pressure in recent months.

President Bush has ordered American troops to act against Iranians
suspected of being involved in the Iraqi insurgency and has deployed a
second aircraft carrier to the Gulf area as a warning to Iran. The UN
Security Council has imposed sanctions because of Iran's refusal to cease
uranium enrichment.

"Some people say that the US president is not prone to calculating the
consequences of his actions," Khamenei said in remarks broadcast on state
television, "but it is possible to bring this kind of person to wisdom.

"US policymakers and analysts know that the Iranian nation would not let
an invasion go without a response," Khamenei added.

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� Suspects questioned over Pakistan airport attack

Today's Top News 

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� President Hu: We are forces for peace

� Astronaut suffered 'mental anguish'

� Security crackdown in Baghdad

� Nuke talks reopen amid upbeat signs

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Chinese Mandarin - Chirac backtracks after gaffe on Iran bomb threat

WORLD / Europe

Chirac backtracks after gaffe on Iran bomb threat

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-02-02 09:36

Speculation about Chirac's health has mounted since he was secretly
admitted to hospital in September 2005 for a blood vessel problem that
affected his vision and caused headaches.

Chirac said in the first interview the main danger from Iran developing a
nuclear bomb was that others, such as Saudi Arabia and Egypt, would
follow suit, not that Tehran would use it.

"Where will it drop it, this bomb? On Israel? It would not have gone 200
metres (650 ft) into the atmosphere before Tehran would be razed to the
ground," the reporters quoted Chirac as saying.

The following day, the French president backtracked: "I retract it, of
course, when I said, One is going to raze Tehran'," the IHT and New York
Times quoted him as saying.

Chirac also withdrew his prediction that a nuclear Iran could encourage
Arab states to build a bomb.

"It is I who was wrong and I do not want to contest it ... I should have
paid better attention to what I was saying and understood that perhaps I
was on the record," the IHT quoted him as saying.

Chirac's office said the president had not changed his stance on Iran and
said the US dailies had acted improperly, even though the French magazine
also reported his U-turn.

"France, with the international community, cannot accept the prospect of
a nuclear-armed Iran," it said in a statement.

"It does not surprise us on the part of certain media from the other side
of the Atlantic, which will use any opportunity to attack France," his
office said.

1 2

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Monday, March 24, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Jilin City at a glance

Sports / Host Cities

Jilin City at a glance

(CAWGOC)
Updated: 2007-01-25 10:11

Geographic Location

Situated at 125''40'~127''56' east longitude and 42''31~44''40' north
latitude, Jilin is the second largest city in Jilin Province. It is
located in the transitional area between Changchai Mountain and Songnen
Plain with the main stream of Songhua River running through the whole
region.

The Jilin Culture Temple Museum

Administrative Divisions

Bordering on Yanbian Autonomous Prefecture in the east, Changchun City
and Siping City in the west, Baishan City, Tonghua City and Liaoyuan City
in the south and Leilongjiang Province in the north, Jilin City covers a
total area of 27,894 square kilometers, of which urban area accounts for
3750 square kilometers. It governs four districts including Changyi,
Chuanying,Longtan and Fengman, one couty Yongji and four county-level
cities Shulan, Panshi, Jiaohe and Huadian.
����
Population

By the end of 2003, the total population of the city had reached 4.514
million. In Northeast China, Jilin is one of the well-known cities with
over 300 years of history. It was the political, economic and military
centers in14th-19th century period, and the capital city of Jilin
Province during the periods of the late Qing Dynasty, Minguo and Civil
Revolutionary War.

The Jilin Meteorolite Museum

Climate

With a temperate continental monsoonal climate, Jilin enjoys four
distinct seasons, including dry and windy springs, warm and rainy
summers, cool and sunny autumns and cold and snowy winters. It has a mean
annual temperature of 3��~5��, an annual frost-free period of 120~130
days, and a total sunlight amount of 2400~2600 hours for the whole year.
The mean annual precipitation of the city is 650~670 millimeters, which
decreases from southeast to northwest, and mean hailstone period is 2~4
days, which often appears in May, June or September and October.

Following is the average climate information of January and February from
2001 to 2005.

Sunrise: 7:15; Sunset: 17:05

Wind speed (m/s): 1.8 (light breeze); wind direction: Southwesterly wind

Average temperature (��C): -13.15

Snowfall (mm): 6.5

Number of Days with Grade-A Air: 80.75%

Overcast and Sunny Days: Percentage of sunny days: 35.5%; Percentage of
overcast days: 17%; Percentage of sunny to overcast days: 47.5%

The Songjiangzhong Road

Natural Resources

Jilin is rich in natural resources, of which land, water conservancy,
mining, forests, and wild animals are higher than average level of the
nation, especially the water resources has made Jilin City the one with a
high level of 3,679 cubic meters per capita.
����
Tourism

Jilin has advantaged tourism resources with natural and cultural
sceneries dotted here and there in the city. Jilin is also well known as
a winter sports city with top-ranking facilities and skiing fields.

Development

Jilin has attached great importance to opening up to the outside world in
recent years, thus having seen steady development in foreign trade and
economic and trade cooperation, and accelerated the tempo of utilizing
foreign direct investment. Investment environment has been improved. It
has set up one development zone at national level - Jilin New and Hi-tech
Industry Development Zone, and three development zones at provincial
level.

GDP

In 2003, Jilin generated a total GDP of RMB 60.01 billion with per capita
GDP reaching RMB 13,808(USD 1,668). The total revenue of the city in 2003
totaled RMB 4.85 billion.

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Chinese language - Sunnis blast hanging of 2 Saddam aides

WORLD / Photo

Sunnis blast hanging of 2 Saddam aides

(AP)
Updated: 2007-01-16 08:37

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The Iraqi government's attempt Monday to close a chapter
on Saddam Hussein's repressive regime - by hanging two of his henchmen -
only appeared to anger many of Saddam's fellow Sunni Muslims after the
former leader's half brother was decapitated on the gallows.

People pray beside the coffins of Barzan Ibrahim, Saddam's half brother
and former intelligence chief, and Awad Hamed al-Bandar, former head of
Iraq's Revolutionary Court who were executed at dawn Monday in Baghdad,
in the town of Ouja, 115 kilometers (70 miles) north of Baghdad, Iraq,
Monday Jan. 15, 2007. [AP]

A thickset Barzan Ibrahim plunged through the trap door and was beheaded
by the jerk of the thick beige rope at the end of his fall, in the same
the execution chamber where Saddam was hanged a little over two weeks
earlier.

A government video of the hanging, played at a briefing for reporters,
showed Ibrahim's body passing the camera in a blur. The body came to rest
on its chest while the severed head lay a few yards away, still wearing
the black hood pulled on moments before by one of Ibrahim's five masked
executioners.

The decapitation appeared inadvertent, and Iraqi officials seemed anxious
to prove they hadn't mutilated Ibrahim's remains.

The hangings came as a suicide car bomber slammed into an Iraqi army
patrol in the northern city of Mosul Monday, killing seven people and
wounding 40 others, police said. A total of at least 55 people were
killed or found dead across Iraq, authorities said.

The US military, meanwhile, announced the deaths of two more soldiers,
both killed in Baghdad.

While Ibrahim's body was wrenched apart by the execution, his
co-defendant, Awad Hamed al-Bandar, head of Saddam's Revolutionary court,
died as expected - swinging at the end of a rope. Both men met death at 3
a.m. wearing reddish orange prison jumpsuits.

Prosecutor Jaafar al-Moussawi, who witnessed the hangings, said Ibrahim
looked tense and protested his innocence as he was brought into the
chamber. The condemned man had once ran Saddam's feared security agency,
the Mukhabarat.

"I did not do anything," al-Moussawi quoted Ibrahim as saying. "It was
all the work of Fadel al-Barrak." Al-Barrak ran two intelligence
departments in Saddam's feared Mukhabarat.

Saddam was hanged amid shouted taunts and insults from Shiite witnesses -
a scene Iraqi officials said was not repeated Monday.

All three executions took place in Saddam-era military intelligence
headquarters, located in the north Baghdad neighborhood of Kazimiyah, a
Shiite area.

By day's end at least 3,000 angry Sunnis, many firing guns in the air,
others weeping or cursing the government, assembled for the burials of
Ibrahim and al-Bandar in Saddam's hometown of Ouja, near Tikrit, 80 miles
north of Baghdad.

"Where are those who cry out in demands for human rights?" Marwan
Mohammed, one of the mourners, asked in grief and frustration. "Where are
the UN and the world's human rights organizations? Barzan had cancer.
They treated him only to keep him alive long enough to kill him. We vow
to take revenge, even if it takes years."

Ibrahim's son-in-law, Azzam Saleh Abdullah, said "we heard the news from
the media. We were supposed to be informed a day earlier, but it seems
that this government does not know the rules."

The execution, he said, reflected what he called the Shiite-led
government hatred for Sunnis. "They still want more Iraqi bloodshed," he
said. "To hell with this democracy."

The executed men, at their request, were buried in a garden outside a
building Saddam had built for religious events. Saddam was buried there
on New Year's eve in a grave chipped out of an interior floor.

Ouja, just outside Tikrit - about a 90-minute drive north of Baghdad on
the Tigris River - is near the scene of Saddam's capture by American
soldiers in December 2003.

Saddam was discovered hiding in a small underground bunker nine months
after he fled the US-led invasion that toppled his regime.

Saddam, Ibrahim and al-Bandar were all handed the death sentence after
their conviction for crimes against humanity, in connection with the
killings of 148 Shiites in Dujail, north of Baghdad, in 1982 - following
a failed assassination attempt there against Saddam.

Saddam was executed last month, four days after an Iraqi appeals court
upheld the verdicts in the Dujail case. Reportedly, the court was under
pressure from Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who wanted Saddam hanged
before the end of 2006.

1 2 

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Learn Chinese - NYC disc jockey shot 13 times dies

WORLD / America

NYC disc jockey shot 13 times dies

(AP)
Updated: 2006-12-24 16:23

NEW YORK - A popular hip-hop disc jockey died Saturday after being shot
at least 13 times earlier this month, police said.

Carl Blaze, born Carlos Rivera, was shot outside an apartment building
near Manhattan's Inwood section on Dec. 7, and his $20,000 diamond chain
was stolen, police said. He was taken to Harlem Hospital Center, where he
died Saturday.

Blaze, 30, was a DJ for hip-hop and R&B radio station Power 105.1 FM for
about three years. He had gained a large fan base by spinning records at
clubs and on the air on Friday and Saturday nights.

Power 105.1 FM was holding a tribute for Blaze on Saturday night. The
station is owned by Clear Channel Communications.

"Our thoughts and prayers are with his family at this time," said Josefa
Paganuzzi, a Clear Channel spokeswoman.

Police said the investigation into the shooting was ongoing.

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Learn Chinese - Hosts Qatar beat Iraq to win soccer gold

Sports / Games News

Hosts Qatar beat Iraq to win soccer gold

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-12-16 13:25

DOHA, Dec 15 - Host nation Qatar won the 428th and final gold medal of
the 15th Asian Games when they beat Iraq 1-0 in a scrappy men's soccer
final on Friday.

Iraq's Alla Mostafa Abd falls as he fights for the ball with Qatar's
Abdulla Obaid Koni (R) during the men's gold medal soccer match at the
15th Asian Games in Doha December 15, 2006. [Reuters]
Defender Bilal Rajab headed home after 63 minutes to win his country a
ninth gold at the December 1-15 sports extravaganza and send a majority
of the 12,000 or so supporters in the Al-Sadd stadium into a frenzy.

"We are very happy to give this gold to everybody, to the people of Qatar
and the Emir," said substitute midfielder Younes Rahmati. "We worked very
hard for this. We trained very hard and this is the one reward."

Iraq, kicked out of the Asian Games after the invasion of Kuwait and
returning for the first time since 1986, were hoping for a first gold
medal at the Games since they won the soccer title in 1982 to bring
together their war-ravaged country.

They enjoyed more than their fair share of the ball but with just a lone
striker up front, they never threatened the Qatar goal and looked
delighted to win silver in such difficult circumstances.

"Football is the only thing that has united the Iraqi people," said Iraq
coach Yahya Manhel. "They were waiting for the gold, it would have made
them happy. But we are still happy that it went to another Arab country."

After two weeks of disappointing crowds, Qatari nationals turned out in
force for the soccer final and the stadium was filling up with
white-robed locals two hours before kickoff.

MORE ADVENTUROUS

Iraq started confidently in the first half, combining neatly in midfield
and retaining possession well but Mostafa Abd Alla was outnumbered up
front and most of their attacks petered out long before they reached
Qatar's penalty area.

Qatar's skilful midfielders made frequent forays into the Iraq half but
it was from set pieces that they looked most dangerous with Uruguay-born
Sebastian hitting the bar with a glancing header from a corner in the
eighth minute.

After 25 minutes, some neat dribbling saw Khalfan Al Khalfan skip past
three defenders but his shot from the edge of the six-yard box came off
the legs of Iraqi goalkeeper Mohammed Khadum.

The deadlock was broken eight minutes into the second half when Majdi
Siddiq's corner was headed on by Hussain Abdulrahman. Khadum got a touch
but Rajab was on hand to head it into the net.

Sebastian put the ball in the net again a minute later but was offside
and the striker hit the side netting after an hour as the hosts
threatened to run riot.

Always the more adventurous of the two sides, Qatar never looked like
relinquishing their lead once they had it and comfortably held on to
claim their first Asian Games soccer title.

"The pressure of the occasion was too much on the players at the
beginning and that's why they weren't really in control," said Qatar's
Bosnian coach Dzemaludin Musovic. "They played much better in the second
half."

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Sunday, March 23, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Rumsfeld pays farewell trip to Iraq

WORLD / America

Rumsfeld pays farewell trip to Iraq

(AP)
Updated: 2006-12-10 09:14

Washington -- US Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld was visiting Iraq,
a Pentagon spokesman said, a day after an emotional farewell at the
Pentagon.

"He's there to express his appreciation to the troops and to thank both
the troops and their families for the sacrifices they are making," said
Air Force Lt. Col. Todd Vician, a Defense Department spokesman, on
Saturday.

It was Rumsfeld's 15th trip to Iraq since the war began; he was last
there in July.

Rumsfeld's trip follows an Friday's Pentagon farewell, where the defense
secretary defended his record on Iraq and Afghanistan.

He said Friday that the worst day of his nearly six years as secretary of
defense occurred when he learned of the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse.

Rumsfeld's Pentagon appearance Friday and his trip to Iraq, where he was
Saturday, were among the few public appearances he has made since
President George W. Bush announced on November 8 that he was replacing
the defense secretary. His last full day will be December 17.

Rumsfeld's farewell tour follows a grim picture of the Iraq war that was
presented this week by a bipartisan commission headed by former Secretary
of State James Baker and former Democratic Rep. Lee Hamilton.

The Iraq Study Group said its prescription for change is needed quickly
to turn around a "grave and deteriorating" situation.

The commission called for direct engagement with Iran and Syria as part
of a new diplomatic initiative and a pullback of all American combat
brigades by early 2008, barring unexpected developments, to shift the US
mission to training and advising.

The report took direct aim at Rumsfeld. Saying there has been a long
tradition of partnership between the military and civilian leaders, the
group said the "tradition has frayed" and must be repaired. It urged the
new defense secretary, former CIA director Robert Gates, to "make every
effort" to encourage military officers to offer independent advice.

President Bush's national security team is debating whether additional
troops are needed to secure Baghdad _ a short-term force increase that
could be made up of all Americans, a combination of US and Iraqi forces,
or all Iraqis, a senior administration official said Saturday.

Other options being debated for inclusion in what the president has said
will be his "new way forward" include a revamped approach to procuring
the help of other nations in calming Iraq; scaling back the military
mission to focus almost exclusively on hunting al-Qaida terrorists; and a
new strategy of outreach to all of Iraq's factions, whose disputes are
fueling some of the worst bloodshed since the war began, said the
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the disclosure of
internal discussions had not been authorized.

Top World News 

� Rumsfeld pays farewell trip to Iraq

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Today's Top News 

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� KMT candidate elected Taipei mayor

� Saddam's nephew escapes Iraqi prison

� China strives to handle mass incidents

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Chinese language - US, N.Korean envoys to meet again in Beijing

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

US, N.Korean envoys to meet again in Beijing

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-29 08:49

The top US and North Korean nuclear negotiators were expected to hold a
second round of meetings Wednesday, the US State Department said, amid a
diplomatic push to resume six-nation talks on Pyongyang's atomic weapons
program.

US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill met Tuesday in Beijing
with North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye Gwan and Chinese Vice
Foreign Minister Wu Dawai.

US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Tuesday in Washington
that Hill and Kim plan to hold talks again Wednesday.

"You want to make sure that everybody, at least, has a good, solid
understanding of what might happen" when six-nation talks aimed at
persuading the North to abandon its nuclear weapons reconvene, McCormack
said.

"What Chris did today (Tuesday) was to start to provide information on
how we might be able to define what is an effective round of the
six-party talks that produces concrete results," he said.

According to South Korea's Yonhap news agency, Hill "stressed that the
North needs to report all of its nuclear programs before seeking economic
incentives."

On his part, Kim insisted that Washington lift its financial sanctions on
Pyongyang and "take steps to help normalize relations between the two
enemies," Yonhap said.

North Korea agreed in September 2005 to abandon its nuclear program in
exchange for security guarantees and aid. But Washington imposed the
financial sanctions against a Macau-based bank on suspicions it was
laundering counterfeit money for the North Koreans. Angered by the move,
Pyongyang withdrew from the talks two months later.

Kim said before Tuesday's meetings got started that the timing of the
next round of six-party talks on his country's nuclear program "depends
on the United States."

"There are too many outstanding issues" and both parties should narrow
their differences, Kim told reporters.

Officials have yet to determine an exact date for the next round of
negotiations. The China-hosted talks involve the United States, North
Korea, Japan, South Korea and Russia, which has not sent an envoy to
Beijing.

"We hope all sides can grasp this opportunity and take a flexible,
pragmatic, and constructive approach in order to realize the early
resumption of six-party talks," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Jiang Yu said at a regular briefing.

Kim's trip to Beijing - a rare overseas visit - and the presence of other
negotiators added to prospects of compromises to give new life to the
talks.

An unannounced meeting between Hill and Kim last month in Beijing led to
Pyongyang agreeing to return to the arms negotiations amid heightened
tensions after its first nuclear test on October 9.

Hill told reporters when he arrived Monday that the US anticipated that
the talks would "get going at some point very soon."

Hill also met separately with South Korea's nuclear envoy, Chun Yung-woo,
and Wu earlier Tuesday, said Susan Stevenson, the spokeswoman for the US
Embassy in Beijing. She did not have any details on the talks.

Japan's representative Kenichiro Sasae told Japanese reporters that he
also had bilateral talks with Wu and Hill.

Top World News 

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� N.Korean envoy says ready for return to talks

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Today's Top News 

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Free Chinese Lesson - Blood tests debunk cat-puppy claim

WORLD / America

Blood tests debunk cat-puppy claim

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-22 10:42

SAO PAULO, Brazil - Brazil's cat-puppy mystery has been solved.

Brazilian student Cassia Aparecida de Souza (L) and her friend Gabriela
Santos pat puppies that her owners claimed were her own offspring born
out of mating with a neighbor's dog, in the southern Brazilian city of
Passo Fundo, Rio Grande del Sur state, November 21, 2006. [Reuters]

Blood tests refute a Brazilian woman's claim that her cat had given birth
to three puppies, geneticist Adil Pacheco said on Tuesday.

Cassia Aparecida de Souza, 18, from a poor neighbourhood of Passo Fundo
in southern Brazil, said last Friday that her cat Mimi had given birth to
the three puppies as well as three kittens, which did not survive.

"People who aren't experts often imagine things," said Pacheco, director
of the Institute of Biological Sciences of the University of Passo Fundo.
"All the facts contradict her."

Pacheco, who was asked by a local newspaper to conduct a chromosome test
to check the spectacular claim which gained wide media attention, said
mammals sometimes nursed the young from another species.

Top World News 

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� Losing candidate names himself 'president'

� Most Japanese favor non-nuclear policy

� At least 112 people killed across Iraq

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Today's Top News 

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Learn Mandarin online - Blair presses for rethink in Iraq, warns Iran

WORLD / Middle East

Blair presses for rethink in Iraq, warns Iran

(AFP)
Updated: 2006-11-14 09:01

LONDON - British Prime Minister Tony Blair called for a change in
strategy in violence-torn Iraq, in particular warning Iran to stop aiding
insurgents there and elsewhere.

In a keynote speech in London, he said the three-year-old conflict -- in
which US and British troops appear increasingly mired -- needs to be seen
as part of a "whole Middle East" strategy.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair answers questions from the media during
his monthly press conference in 10 Downing Street in London, 06 November
2006. Blair called for a change in strategy in violence-torn Iraq, in
particular warning Iran to stop aiding insurgents there and elsewhere.
[AFP]

"Just as the situation is evolving, so our strategy has to evolve to meet
it," he said.

In advance of the speech, Blair's office had suggested he would focus his
message on efforts to persuade Syria and Iran to help defuse the violence
in Iraq, as well as elsewhere.

But the final version of the speech omitted almost all reference to
Syria, while offering Iran a "strategic choice": essentially, help the
West or face increasing isolation.

"There is a fundamental misunderstanding that this (strategy in the
Middle East) is about changing policy on Syria and Iran ... in any event
that is not where we start."

"On the contrary, a whole-region policy should start with
Israel/Palestine. That is the core. We should then make progress on
Lebanon. We should unite all moderate Arab and Muslim voices behind a
push for peace in those countries but also in Iraq," he said.

In the wide-ranging address, he said a major part of the answer to the
Iraq problem "lies not in Iraq itself but outside it, in the whole of the
region where the same forces are at work."

"Just as it is, in significant part, forces outside Iraq that are trying
to create mayhem inside Iraq, so we have to have a strategy that pins
them back, not only in Iraq but outside of it too ...

"This is what I call a 'whole Middle East' strategy," he said.

Pressure for a change of direction in Iraq has been fueled by defeat for
the Republican Party in last week's American mid-term elections, which
led to the departure of Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and leaves Bush
more vulnerable in Congress.

Speaking on Iran, Blair said Tehran's strategy was simple: to deflect
pressure from the West over its nuclear plans -- which Washington
suspects are a cover for developing atomic weapons -- it was helping
extremists in Lebanon, Iraq, and in the Palestinian territories.

"It is a perfectly straightforward and clear strategy. It will only be
defeated by an equally clear one," he said.

Under this, the West should "offer Iran a clear strategic choice: they
help the Middle East peace process not hinder it; they stop supporting
terrorism in Lebanon or Iraq; they abide by, not flout, their
international obligations.

"In that case, a new partnership is possible. Or alternatively they face
the consequences of not doing so: isolation," he said.

Blair's speech came a day before he is due to give video-link evidence to
the Iraq Study Group, the bipartisan panel led by former US secretary of
state James Baker, which is looking at current coalition policy in Iraq.

The British leader's testimony to the panel will come a day after the
appearance of US President George W. Bush before the experts on Monday.

Speaking ahead of his testimony, Bush also warned the Iranians.

"It's very important for the world to unite with one common voice to say
to the Iranians that, if you choose to continue forward, you'll be
isolated," he said. "There has to be a consequence for their
intransigence."

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Today's Top News 

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Saturday, March 22, 2008

Free Chinese Lesson - Resurgent Democrats win control of House

WORLD / America

Resurgent Democrats win control of House

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-08 14:22

WASHINGTON - Democrats won control of the House early Wednesday after a
dozen years of Republican rule in a resounding repudiation of a war, a
president and a scandal-scarred Congress.

Democratic party supporters react as TV news first predict that the
Democratic Party will control the U.S. House of Representatives at a
mid-term election night party for the Democratic Party in Washington,
November 7, 2006. Americans voted on Tuesday in elections for Congress
that could curb the power of George W. Bush's Republicans, force a change
of direction in Iraq and shape the legacy of a president with two years
left in office. [Reuters]

"From sea to shining sea, the American people voted for change," declared
Rep. Nancy Pelosi, the hard-charging California Democrat in line to
become the nation's first female House speaker.

"Today we have made history," she said, "now let us make progress."

Faced with the inevitable, the White House made plans for President Bush
to call Pelosi first thing in the morning; he will enter his final two
years in office with at least half of Congress in the opposition party's
hands.

Just after 1 a.m., Democrats had won 218 seats, enough to control the
House, and were leading for another 15, which give them 233. Republicans,
who hold 229 seats in the current House, won 176 and were leading in
another 26, which would give them 202.

The Democrats won 24 Republican-controlled seats ,and no Democratic
incumbent had lost by early Wednesday.

Top World News 

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Today's Top News 

� US election: Democrats win key Senate, House races

� President set for first Indian visit

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� Entrepreneurs are students' real idols

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Chinese Mandarin - US says close to WTO deal with Russia

WORLD / Europe

US says close to WTO deal with Russia

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-10-31 09:02

Washington - The United States and Russia are close to a deal on Moscow's
13-year-old bid to join the World Trade Organization, officials said on
Monday.

"The finish line is in sight," said Sean Spicer, a spokesman for the US
Trade Representative's office.

"We believe that we are close to resolving all remaining issues in the
bilateral (deal) and both sides are now in the process of consultations,"
Spicer said.

A deal with the United States would eliminate one of the biggest
remaining hurdles to Russia's WTO entry. However, Moscow must still
strike a multilateral accord with all 149 member countries, covering
thorny issues such as protecting intellectual property rights.

Russia is the largest and most populous country still outside the WTO.
Its membership would be a major milestone in its transition from a
communist to a market-based economy, and significantly expand the
geographic scope of the Geneva-based world trade body.

Washington's goal is to finalize the "bilateral agreement as soon as
possible, after which time we will concentrate on the issues that will
need to be addressed in the multilateral negotiations to complete the
accession process," Spicer said.

Failure in July

The latest talks followed a failed effort to reach a deal before the
Group of Eight summit meeting in St. Petersburg in July. After that,
President Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin set a goal of
finishing in October.

An agreement would give the two leaders something to celebrate when they
attend the annual APEC (Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation) summit meeting
in Hanoi in mid-November.

Putin was furious when the two sides failed to wrap up a trade deal in
St. Petersburg, and the climate between Moscow and Washington has grown
chillier since.

Russia has snubbed the United States by saying it will develop its
Shtokman gas field -- with enough reserves to supply the world for a year
-- without the help of big US energy firms. An escalation in tensions
between Russia and ex-Soviet Georgia, a US ally and WTO member, could
also derail Moscow's bid to join the trade group.

Russia's chief WTO negotiator, Maxim Medvedkov, has returned to Moscow
after intensive negotiations in Washington last week. He will remain in
contact with his US counterparts by telephone, Moscow officials said.

A spokeswoman for Russia's Economy and Trade Ministry declined to
elaborate on the state of the talks, citing an agreement by both sides
not to comment.

Separately, the American Chamber of Commerce in Russia said executives
from 13 US blue-chip companies, including Ford and Boeing, had written to
Bush and Putin urging them to wrap up a deal. Medvedkov said the letter
showed a majority of US businesses wanted Russia to join the trade club.

"It's a signal that reflects the genuine attitude of American business
toward our accession to the WTO," he said in Monday's edition of the
Kommersant daily. Adding that the letter's signatories included heads of
banks and financial services companies, he said: "These are big companies
that account for a large share of trade and investment."

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